Ratings and Reviews

9.3K Ratings

DANGEROUS WOMAN

Dangerous Woman is amazing! A big improvement when compared to Focus. This era will be her best one yet.

Zach XCX
03/10/2016

DANGEROUS WOMAN

Dangerous Woman is amazing! A big improvement when compared to Focus. This era will be her best one yet.

rightthereagb
03/10/2016

Amazing and cohesive

This is Ariana's best and most mature studio effort, she excels in delivering quality music. She has yet to dissapoint me, hoping this album takes on a more urban route, although I'm all for her trying out new things. -@RightThereAGB

rightthereagb
03/10/2016

Amazing and cohesive

This is Ariana's best and most mature studio effort, she excels in delivering quality music. She has yet to dissapoint me, hoping this album takes on a more urban route, although I'm all for her trying out new things. -@RightThereAGB

#ChersBrat
03/10/2016

DANGEROUS WOMAN

“dangerous woman” is innovative for ariana; it portrays her as who she is rather than who the media tries to make her out to be. she’s grown from feeling butterflies in her stomach because of a boy’s love to being empowered by both men and women equally, and i think that sends a powerful message to her young fans and her older fanbase as well. i am so proud or you, ari, and am more than ready for you to deliver the best album you’ve ever recorded.

#ChersBrat
03/10/2016

DANGEROUS WOMAN

“dangerous woman” is innovative for ariana; it portrays her as who she is rather than who the media tries to make her out to be. she’s grown from feeling butterflies in her stomach because of a boy’s love to being empowered by both men and women equally, and i think that sends a powerful message to her young fans and her older fanbase as well. i am so proud or you, ari, and am more than ready for you to deliver the best album you’ve ever recorded.

About Ariana Grande

Armed with a mesmerizing, nimble soprano—and a vocal register often likened to Mariah Carey’s and Christina Aguilera’s—Ariana Grande began her career as a child star on Broadway and Nickelodeon before transforming into a pop and R&B powerhouse. Instantly recognizable thanks to her signature ponytail, cat ears, babydoll dresses, and breezy self-confidence, her slyly sexual personal brand has, like that of the Spice Girls before her, become an iconic image of young female power. But Grande is more than a symbol: Over the course of several albums and scores of hit singles—beginning with 2013’s “The Way” (featuring Mac Miler) through The Weeknd-assisted “Love Me Harder” and “Break Free” (featuring Zedd)—she has consistently outshined her male collaborators and deftly parlayed her stardom into activism. An LGBTQ advocate and outspoken feminist (“I’m tired of living in a world where women are mostly referred to as a man’s past, present, or future PROPERTY,” she tweeted in 2016), she uses her platform to confront issues like misogyny, sexism, homophobia, and bullying, spreading a message of love over all. Nowhere was this more clear than in May 2017: After terrorists attacked her concert in Manchester, England, killing 22 and injuring hundreds, Grande continued her tour. "Perspective changes your life,” she told Beats 1’s Ebro Darden. "You want to stay in the moment and try not to give into fear, because obviously the whole point of finishing the tour was being there for my fans. You want to set the same example and keep going.” And that she did: Her Max Martin-produced smash “No Tears Left to Cry,” an escapist dance-floor triumph released a year after the attack, sends a message of hope and healing, with a dose of hear-me-roar attitude.